Tahoe Biographer presented with Supreme Award
News Release - for immediate
release
Minister presents Tahoe Biographer with Supreme Award
Judith Binney Wins 2010 New
Zealand Post Book of the Year
Minister of
Arts, Culture and Heritage, Christopher Finlayson has
honoured historian Judith Binney with the country’s
highest literary accolade, the New Zealand Post Book of the
Year, for her work Encircled Lands, a book about
Tahoe’s quest for self-government of their lands, granted
to them in law more than a century ago.
Tahoe, represented by kaumatua Wharehuia Milroy and Pou Temara, responded in numbers to the presentation at the gala awards ceremony held in Auckland. Last year, Tahoe bestowed Binney with the name Tomoirangi o Te Aroha (a little cloud of rain from heaven) in recognition of her work.
New
Zealand Post Book Awards judge, Paul Diamond, described the
winning work as one that will profoundly change our
understanding of our shared history.
‘Encircled
Lands is an exhaustive, comprehensive history of Te Rohe
Pa tae o Te Urewera, the only autonomous tribal district
that was recognised in law. Not only does it fulfill the
author’s hopes of revealing an almost unknown history to a
new audience, it also deftly illustrates why the history of
the Urewera and its people continues to
resonate.’
Debut novelist, Alison Wong won the 2010 New Zealand Post Book Award for Fiction for her book, As The Earth Turns Silver, ahead of established writers, Fiona Farrell and Owen Marshall.
Charmaine Pountney, who joined Diamond with Elizabeth Smither, Paul Diamond, Neville Peat and convenor, Stephen Stratford on the Awards judging panel, said Wong brings a powerful new voice and new themes to New Zealand fiction.
’Based on meticulous research, this novel opens new windows on the development of our nation; it also opens our hearts to the anguish caused by racism, ignorance, failures in family relationship and communication, and war. The book is a delight to look at and hold, as well as deeply moving to read,’ says Pountney.
Brian Turner, a leading
biographer, essayist, poet and conservationist, was
presented with the 2010 New Zealand Post Book Award for
Poetry for his collection, Just This, described by
judge Elizabeth Smither as a life’s work in its reach, its
depth and its deceptive plainness of
surface.
He took the prize ahead of fellow
Mainlanders Bernadette Hall (Bank’s Peninsula) and Michael
Harlow (Alexandra).
‘Just This dares to ask the profoundest questions about place and human existence, how we live now and how we hand the world on. It is dangerous poetry because it addresses ethics but at the same time it is leavened with a sweet and sly self-awareness as it searches for “something you can have faith in, swear by”. The journey from the first poem to the last is a revelation,’ says Smither.
In a tightly fought
contest that had judges reaching for superlatives, co-owner
of Wellington’s famed Logan Brown restaurant, celebrity
chef and passionate fisherman, Al Brown won the Illustrated
Non-fiction category for his book Go Fish: Recipes and
stories from the New Zealand
Coast.
Awards’ judge Neville
Peat described Go Fish as a seafood recipe book with
edge and attitude.
‘Colourful images pour from the
pages and spicing up the illustrative side are busy montages
demonstrating how to prepare crayfish, crab and paua, and
how to fillet a flounder - no mean feat, any of this. The
recipes themselves, easy to follow, employ an engaging mix
of type sizes and layout techniques. For a cookbook, it’s
a remarkable page-turner,’ says Peat.
Go
Fish also won this year’s coveted People’s Choice
Award as voted by thousands of readers
nationwide.
The full list of 2010 New Zealand Post
Book Awards winners is as follows:
New Zealand
Post Book of the Year and General Non-fiction Award
winner:
Encircled Lands: Te Urewera, 1820-1921
by Judith Binney (Bridget Williams
Books)
Fiction Award winner: As the
Earth Turns Silver by Alison Wong (Penguin Group
(NZ))
Poetry Award winner: Just This
by Brian Turner (Victoria University
Press)
Illustrated Non-fiction Award and
People’s Choice Award winner: Go Fish: Recipes and
stories from the New Zealand Coast by Al Brown
(Random House NZ)
In a substantially increased prize-pool from previous years, the New Zealand Post Book of the Year Award winner received $15,000. Winners of the four Category Awards each received $10,000 and the People’s Choice Award winner $5,000.
This year’s New Zealand Post Book
Awards winners will appear at a free
event:
On Sunday 5 September from 1.00 -
2.30pm at Te Papa Marae, hosted by Kim Hill. Go to www.nzpostbookawards.co.nz for more
information.
The winners of the 2010 New
Zealand Society of Authors (NZSA) Best First Book Awards -
announced earlier this year - were also honoured tonight.
They are:
NZSA Hubert Church Best First Book Award
for Fiction: Anna Taylor for Relief (Victoria
University Press).
NZSA Jessie Mackay Best First Book
Award for Poetry: Selina Tusitala Marsh for her
collection Fast Talking PI (Auckland University
Press).
NZSA E.H. McCormick Best First Book Award for
Non-Fiction: Pip Desmond for Trust: A True Story of
Women & Gangs (Random House NZ).
Each NZSA Best First Book Awards category winner received $2,500.
New Zealand Post Group’s sponsorship of the country’s national book awards is symbolic of their strong and active support of the country’s literature. As sponsor of the New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards for 15 years, this new sponsorship highlights the company’s commitment to making literature accessible and promoting literary excellence. Working closely with Booksellers NZ, New Zealand Post and other dedicated segments of the community actively encourage New Zealanders to read and enjoy books.
The New Zealand Post Book Awards 2010 are also funded by Creative New Zealand. The Awards are managed by Booksellers NZ and supported by the New Zealand Society of Authors and Book Tokens (NZ) Ltd.
ENDS